News
Last week, the Transportation Security Administration announced the end of the shoes-off policy. It will certainly be good ...
There are some circumstances when it's OK to take your shoes off on a plane, but mostly, you should keep them on.
Wearing shoes through security was previously reserved for young, old or TSA PreCheck travelers.
We can keep our shoes on at TSA, but we still have to keep our liquids to 3.4 ounces. Here's why the agency is keeping that rule.
Oversight Committee releases video of Biden's physician's closed-door testimony 5 Front Yard Features That Are Always Eyesores, According to Designers Pakistani actor Humaira Asghar Ali found dead ...
The TSA recently said passengers may no longer have to take their shoes off for screenings. NJ airports haven't publicly stated their positions.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed the change, stating that shoes can remain on for most passengers at airports nationwide.
"To me, if that's the bigger issue, I'll take my shoes off any day." But Caleb Harmon-Marshall, a former TSA officer who now writes the travel newsletter Gate Access, said fliers shouldn't be ...
After nearly two decades of having to remove your shoes before going through security at airports, you no longer have to do so. The nationwide policy change is now in effect at all airports ...
Taking off shoes at airport security became a requirement in 2006, several years after “shoe bomber” Richard Reid’s failed attempt to take down a flight from Paris to Miami in late 2001.
For nearly twenty years, most air travelers in the U.S. have been required to remove their shoes when going through security. That requirement has ended.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results